Letters from the Issue of November 1, 2001

So Sayeth the Old SpookNow tell us, would it help to bribe the INS? Bob Norman’s article “Admitting Terror” (October 18) was a true public service. It’s shameful how indifferent our authorities are regarding immigration. Having lived in Mexico, Uruguay, Spain, and Japan, among other places, I can tell you…

Shake

The folks at IRmagazine have a roundabout strategy for boosting readership. “It’s a literary magazine,” explains editor in chief Ben Carrasco. “We do short stories, poetry, nonfiction. But people like to read about music, so we write about music, too.” The only problem is, Carrasco doesn’t think there’s all that…

Citizen Saul

“A recession is never a good thing,” says Saul Gross, owner of Streamline Properties (a real estate management and brokerage firm) and a candidate for the Miami Beach City Commission in the November 6 election. But, he explains carefully, there’s a “silver lining” to this ongoing crunch, particularly as it…

Letters to the Editor

INS: Incompetent Nonsense ServiceAnd I should know because I worked there: I am a former immigration inspector at Miami International Airport and am writing in response to Bob Norman’s article “Admitting Terror” (October 18). I agree with Immigration and Naturalization Service inspector José Touron’s assessment of the persistent problems that…

Shake

Pushed back from the original September date, the Fourth Annual Mix Show Power Summit finally went down this past weekend, bringing to town more than 100 commercial radio mix-show DJs for some high-profile politickin’. The Eden Roc meet-and-greet sessions were closed to the public, but late-night Thursday through Sunday, jocks…

Letters to the Editor

High and InsideIn perpetual awe of the slugger: I read Gaspar González’s article about Ted Williams (“America’s Past Time,” October 11) and just had to say it gave me chills. I have been a die-hard baseball fan since I was old enough to hold a bat, and ever since then…

Shake

On September 5 Emilio Estefan, Jr., and his niece, Univision host Lili “La Flaca” Estefan, made the short list of guests at the Bush administration’s first White House gala, boosting the Latin factor at the dinner honoring Mexican President Vicente Fox. Cowboy to cowboy, the Mexican leader was pushing the…

The Alonso Shell Game

Investigators on the trail of Miami-Dade County Commissioner Miriam Alonso have uncovered a dizzying array of front groups and secret bank accounts apparently used by Alonso to generate and then hide a private slush fund. Prosecutors and police discovered the existence of these bank accounts while researching Alonso’s connection to…

Full Recovery

What’s the tasteful way to make a buck during a time of national tragedy? That’s the question the pop culture industry has been gingerly grappling with a month on from the horrific attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. In those strikes’ immediate aftermath, entertainment practically vanished from…

Letters to the Editor

Trauma + Emotion = Sincere SentimentAnd Now This Word from Your Pinko Weekly Beware confusing the message with the messenger: In last week’s issue, I was surprised to see a full-page open letter next to the regular letters section that appeared to be endorsed by New Times. It wasn’t signed…

Paradise Lost, Again

You don’t need to tell the staff at the Delano Hotel that a recession is here. One look at the pool makes it pretty obvious. Gone are the days when only a strategically placed tip would snag you a prime deck chair as the $400-per-night set splashed and sweated in…

Letters to the Editor

Orwellian RageStill, I’ll defend her right to be wrong: My first response to Susan Eastman’s article “1984 and Counting” (September 27) was anger. But upon reflection I realize she had every right to disagree with all the patriotism and fanaticism that follows it. She is correct in her assessment of…

Shake

In the dark days of slavery, Carnival offered release. For two days and nights before Lent every year in Trinidad, sorrow gave way to bacchanal as the horrific face of reality was hidden by the mask of fantasy. Now, less than a month after the terrorist attacks, Carnival’s music and…

You Coulda Called Him Al

Even through a closed door you can still hear DJ Greo’s angry voice thundering away. “I got no life!” he hollers. “I got no girlfriend! I got no kids! I’m a grown-ass man now, and all I got is this!” This is Blaze 104.7 FM, the hip-hop station Greo has…

Letters to the Editor

Ferré: Can This Leopard Change His Spots?Not if history is any measure of the future: Ashley Fantz let Maurice Ferré off the hook too easily in her profile (“That Old Familiar Face,” September 13). Ferré is a man who, once upon a time during his early campaigns in the Seventies,…

Shake

The most powerful statement made at last Friday’s all-star telethon, “America: A Tribute to Heroes,” was unspoken and unsung. Simulcast by more than 35 networks and cable outlets and 8000 radio stations, the two-hour program quietly provided 89 million viewers with a definition of heroism based solely on saving lives…

Letters to the Editor

From Secret Service to Public ServiceScribe praised, demands promotion, big fat raise: Thanks to Rebecca Wakefield for accepting the challenge of investigating and writing about the plight of my son Patrick Cruise regarding the illegal conduct of the Secret Service (“Life in the Secret Service,” September 13). She did a…

Shake

Hoping to keep politics from drowning out the music, the Latin Grammys moved from Miami to Los Angeles. Then the suicide-hijacking of four commercial airliners on the morning of the event blasted the sound of Latin music out of the sky. With more than 5000 bodies buried beneath the rubble…

Shake

The silhouette of a go-go dancer shimmies above the broad staircase that leads to Billboardlive. Her ponytail flips as she bends, grabs her ankles, and jutts her posterior toward the promoters, producers, politicians, journalists, and stars waiting for their names to be checked off at the velvet rope below. So…

The Dissection of Miriam Alonso

The condominium was ideal. Located on the twelfth floor, overlooking the ocean, it was in the heart of Miami Beach at 5701 Collins Ave. Two bedrooms and two baths, a cozy 825 square feet of space in a building that came with its own restaurant, fitness center, and beauty parlor…

Letters to the Editor

Emilio: Convenient TargetFree weekly nukes another Cuban success story: I’ve got to hand it to New Times. You certainly don’t discriminate among Cuban Americans. You go after Cuban politicians, businesses, athletes, and now musicians like Emilio Estefan (“Los Producers,” September 6). If only your own biases and insecurities wouldn’t get…

The Secret Flush Fund

Miriam Alonso, the Miami-Dade County Commissioner whose politics are as shrill as her voice, is under criminal investigation for allegedly misusing campaign contributions collected during her successful 1998 run for re-election. The investigation is being conducted by the public-corruption unit of the Miami-Dade Police Department. Sources close to the inquiry…